Abstract

Random walkers absorbing on a boundary sample the harmonic measure linearly and independently: we discuss how the recurrence times between impacts enable nonlinear moments of the measure to be estimated. From this we derive a technique to simulate dielectric breakdown model growth, which is governed nonlinearly by the harmonic measure. For diffusion-limited aggregation, recurrence times are shown to be accurate and effective in probing the multifractal growth measure in its active region. For the dielectric breakdown model our technique grows large clusters efficiently and we are led to significantly revise earlier exponent estimates. Previous results by two conformal mapping techniques were less converged than expected, and in particular a recent theoretical suggestion of superuniversality is firmly refuted.